Have you reproduced or replicated the results and conclusions of a recent article? If the answer is yes, we invite you to publish your confirmatory experiments and observations at the Labome new journal TRUE.

Scientific advances are achieved through reproducible experimentations and replicable observations. However, non-original, confirmatory research is seldom published. TRUE is dedicated to observations and experiments that validate and confirm recently published reagents, experimental methods, diagnostic procedures, medical treatment regimens, surgical protocols, and other research conclusions.

TRUE also aims to become a publishing platform for junior researchers such as college interns, graduate students, and medical residents to help them establish scientific credentials. Please forward this invitation to college interns, graduate students, or residents in your organization.

TRUE is not peer-reviewed. For any manuscript without an established investigator, a recommendation from the principal investigator is required. The manuscript authors are encouraged to contact the authors of the original article and seek a recommendation from them.

Manuscript organization is flexible. Authors can elect to use these sections: Authors, Affiliations, Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusions, Acknowledgments, References, Figure Legends, and Tables. Title and Abstract are not required. The manuscript must include the title of the article the results of which are being confirmed and validated.

Manuscripts and associated figures and tables should be emailed to editor@labome.com.

Alan is a critical care paramedic, paramedic educator and prehospital researcher, currently working around the world as an educator and researcher. He has previously worked and studied across Europe, North America and the Middle East. He holds a Graduate Certificate in Intensive Care Paramedic Studies, and an MSc in Critical Care. His main interests are in care of the elderly, end-of-life care, patient safety, professionalism (including role and identity), and paramedic education.

From what I can gather it’s for research in the biomedical sciences fields Wasi – “TRUE is dedicated to observations and experiments that validate and confirm recently published reagents, experimental methods, diagnostic procedures, medical treatment regimens, surgical protocols, and other research conclusions.”